Daniel Reetz – “DIY Book Scanning”.
A presentation by Daniel Reetz from the Open Hardware Summit on the creation and evolution of the DIY Book Scanner project
Daniel Reetz – “DIY Book Scanning”.
A presentation by Daniel Reetz from the Open Hardware Summit on the creation and evolution of the DIY Book Scanner project
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On Saturday I had the pleasure of attending MiniSoOnCon, a southern Ontario Hackerspaces/Makers mini-conference, at ThinkHaus, Hamilton, which included presenters from the spaces hacklab.to, KwartzLab, and Diyode . I have been interested in Maker culture and hackerspaces for a while, and I saw this as the perfect opportunity to jump in at the deep end.
What is Maker culture? What are hackerspaces? Well…
A hackerspace is a physical location where like-minded people get together in a cooperative environment to pool their knowledge, experience, and physical resources with a goal to bringing into reality the projects about which they’ve been dreaming. The sky is the limit, almost literally: projects range from building hardware to building art, from restoring antique equipment to putting electronic blinking eyes in a crocheted doll. Put simply, members get together at the space to make stuff, to work on personal projects or bigger collaborative ones. (quote from KwartzLab)
I attended the following sessions
Journalism students from Ryerson and UWO where covering the event as part of a project on Maker culture, and you can see video from the day on their site.
So what does this have to do with libraries? I believe public libraries and maker culture are a perfect match, and I take the opportunity to spread the word when I can. The ideas that fuel hackerspaces, such as cooperation, resource and information sharing, self-directed education, and a diversity of views are concepts that are central to our profession’s ethos. And in these economically difficult times, a movement that offers an alternative to consumer culture and a return to DIY independence is timely indeed.
I would strongly suggest that librarians contact their local hackerspace or makerspace. You’ll find we have a lot in common. In the near future I hope to see public libraries with 3D printers, laser engravers, tool lending libraries, and classes like the ones at MiniSoOnCon.
So, why are you still reading this? Get out there and make something.